Biomasses are a biological reality that cannot be denied as existing, but even though they exist physically, yet they have not attained the height of Homo sapiens. Humans could be termed as biomasses when they don’t fully put into use their human qualifications. Men and women that don’t bother to think. Men and women that don’t bother to notice things that are out of order. People who are indifferent about the happenings around them. Men and women that don’t respond with solution to the challenges of the era. All of these people are united by one common name BIOMASSES.
— Sunday AdelajaImagination is more important than knowledge”, with due respect to Mr. Einstein, I beg to differ! “Imagination is not possible without knowledge.
— I areIf a fact does not modify your logic on being known, either you don't believe the fact or it is not a fact.
— Raheel FarooqAll our interior world is reality - and that perhaps more so than our apparent world.
— Marc ChagallSome churches, sects, cults or religious movements are basically collective egoic entities, as rigidly identified with their mental positions as the followers of any political ideology that is closed to any alternative interpretation of reality.
— Eckhart TolleThe trade union movement represents the organized economic power of the workers... It is in reality the most potent and the most direct social insurance the workers can establish.
— Samuel GompersIt's always comforting to tell yourself things are going to be alright, because even if a part of you senses that you're lying, it's comforting to shut it out- shut out reality and pretend- because pretending is nice.
— Emma AbdullahReality is just an interpretation. Some people believe only God really knows what's going on: we mortals just make up our own versions of it.
— Kate KerriganTo the person who believes this- as the western world did up until a few centuries ago- this physical, sensible world is good because it proceeds from a divine source. The artist usually knows this by instinct; his senses, which are used to penetrating the concrete, tell him so. When Conrad said that his aim as an artist was to render the highest possible justice to the visible universe, he was speaking with the novelist's surest instinct. The artist penetrates the concrete world in order to find at its depths the image of its source, the image of ultimate reality. This in no way hinders his perception of evil but rather sharpens it, for only when the natural world is seen as good does evil become intelligible as a destructive force and a necessary result of our freedom.
— Flannery O'ConnorYour thoughts do not create reality. They either permit it or they do not.
— Alan Cohen